Jump to content

Just-A-Stick

Members
  • Posts

    5504
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    34

Just-A-Stick last won the day on April 11

Just-A-Stick had the most liked content!

About Just-A-Stick

  • Birthday January 22

Contact Methods

Profile Information

  • Member Title
    My Jesus is SO COOL!!
  • Pronouns
    she/her
  • Location
    With @SmilingPanda19 and @Part of The Narative in our Walmart dumpster
  • Interests
    hi :)
    i love jesus, thrifting, and reading
    i'm an amateur potter, sort of broke, a student, an artist, a child of God, a poet, a choir kid, a lover of nature and a huger of people and trees.
    i'm a bit quirky but its okay because i was made exactly how i was supposed to be made, and i'm learning to love who i am in Christ!
    please feel free to PM me to hear my testimony, ask questions, hear encouragement, or genuinely just talk to me
    (i'm one of those rare people-loving introverts <3)

Just-A-Stick's Achievements

3k

Reputation

Single Status Update

See all updates by Just-A-Stick

  1. The Space Heater

     

    On the then-below-zero day, it was on,
    near the patients' chair, the old heater
    kept by the analyst's couch, at the end,
    like the infant's headstone that was added near the foot
    of my father's grave. And it was hot, with the almost
    laughing satire of a fire's heat,
    the little coils like hairs in Hell.
    And it was making a group of sick noises—
    I wanted the doctor to turn it off
    but I couldn't seem to ask, so I just
    stared, but it did not budge. The doctor
    turned his heavy, soft palm
    outward, toward me, inviting me to speak, I
    said, "If you're cold-are you cold? But if it's on 
    for me..." He held his palm out toward me,
    I tried to ask, but I only muttered,
    but he said, "Of course," as if I had asked,
    and he stood up and approached the heater, and then
    stood on one foot, and threw himself
    toward the wall with one hand, and with the other hand
    reached down, behind the couch, to pull
    the plug out. I looked away,
    I had not known he would have to bend
    like that. And I was so moved, that he
    would act undignified, to help me,
    that I cried, not trying to stop, but as if
    the moans made sentences which bore
    some human message. If he would cast himself toward the
    outlet for me, as if bending with me in my old
    shame and horror, then I would rest
    on his art-and the heater purred, like a creature
    or the familiar of a creature, or the child of a familiar,
    the father of a child, the spirit of a father,
    the healing of a spirit, the vision of healing,
    the heat of vision, the power of heat,
    the pleasure of power.

    —Sharon Olds

×
×
  • Create New...